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Established in 1821. GKEENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1880. New Series No. 648.
OJTNtsboro |3aii|iot.
I —I 111* WKFM.V AT
I ■ N-RBORO. >f. C.
- mli Kim St.
:■.:•;=;.•
:. - . al.CC
: ice month, free
inn ■ i u aea -
, ; Circulation is large
igenipor-extraordinary
I .v k 1 in" ■- mo -t in" 8 n">| 1 >'•
Miscellaneous.
I1.-..0O
80 (KJ
30.00
3S.00
40.00
uo.oo
110.00
i.v».oo
i V » M 1
i IO.OO l.'i.oo
18 ■"' 80.00
; Ml 12.0(1 ir..i I 84.00
3 00 30.00
24.00 4l).iin
i i G5.00
|5 l 1 10.00 -Mi COl 15.00'
licea I-". cento per line for first
: Uj pel hue fur each sab-rtioB.
mi .' inserted for less than
_
tementa payable in ad-ill;
advertisetnente quarterly
lix weeks, f7, Magistrates]
• i.: weeks, j.'.; Administrators'
I *\ i.l.-, s.I..'," —i» advance.
rates foi doable colanin a.lvor-
Creensboro Business Directory.
tuili uHural luuilemeula,
lliii ilvture. 4tc-.
A i . iM ' '■• * ,"1' Elm ■"'•
u II vVakelield & Co., Booth Elm at.
.', >. .: ton,
i • i. YJ ....
Hooka aad Mallonory.
. -. South B'm »t.
Ill l< I. HlllkN, fcC.
-■- . V. - ; Depot.
WEAVER BROS.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
mid dealers in
GENERAL MERCHANDISE.
Connigivnenls of Produce Solicited.
Quick sales aud prompt returns. Refer-ences
if denred. Wilmington 8t.
KALEIOH, M.C
March. 17. jSO 3m.
LAW SCHOOL.
OREEN8BORO, N. C.
For information aa to terms, Jtc.japply to
JOHN II DILLARD,
Jan 7 1SS0 ROBERT P DICK.
ALt'RCIl M. M..I.H : i. *. nX.NDIRHOX :
SCALES & HENDERSON,
AtlunnT-.-AI-l.uw.
QUBMBOtto, - - • N. C.
Practice in the State and Federal Coarta.
Will attend to holiness heretofore entrust-ed
to Scales &• Scales anises othorwise
directed. Oflico in the Court House.
Greensboro, N. C, Sept. 14, 'oo.-ly-d. w.
E. ID. STJZJEIJE;
AITOllMIV AT LAW
ORKKXSBORO, N. C.
Will practice in Slate and Federal Courts.
CT Collections a Specialty.^! 696-1/
Attorney at Law,
Creensboro, - - • N. 4J.
Will practice in State and.Fsderal Courts.
Prompt attention given to all business en-r
usted to him.
iyCollection ol claims a speoi ally.
Dec. 3. Is7» I7.
J11. W. liWt.1. R. K. MHO
ICiinUliig It onsen.
H ink -I Ureeual 8. I. m Bt
|>r) 1.<K»I«. HOUIM, SIMM'S, &C.
/.'t.11.' Uta -
v. . II nart, Weal Market >t.
I...-: Mai kei -t.
ith Lira at.
■-. i; M Market -t
.. ,-■ Mo ...-t St.
.
1,1 ui -I-I-. i::<.
. A . -IIUlll ► lUI '1
iieuter iii Marble, Etc.
Strei t.
...u....i> ..(in Machine shops
mi,lit wo, V\ uhmguH
1 lull lien. lint's, *,»-.
Pomona 1111: Nonaries—
S. .. II.-- 1
l'ui-iitliue,_i:u-.
i: rorbie A Bro., McAdoo lb-use
ui St.
■larneHN aud BsuMsmr*.
Leu Hi 1M1 ■'. South Klin st,
Jobbers In Notions, ic.
A i'».., South Kim St.
liwdtl, Ml*»•!-«art, Etc
: 1 a Soath Kim st.
GLENN & KING,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Will practioe in the State and Federal
Coarta All hueiuess promptly stlended to.
rtr"C-.l lections a specialty.
July 15.--.lin.
I.KVI M. SCOTT. WALTCR P. C1LUWUI
w
-< 41 I I A VALDWELL.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
ILL practice in the Superier Court ot
TV Gtiilfnrd, Alatnance, Randolph. David-s.-
ti, Forsyth, Kowan, Iredell aud Iseeklsn-hurg.
Also in the Supreme Court of the
State; in the Federal Court at Greensboro
and Stateaville, iuBaukruptry,aud In courts
atChamhers.
Special attention given to loans of money
on Mtirt^'.u.'eandithersecurities.
lebllMy.
Dr. K. H. (Gregory
RESPECTFULLY
OFFERS HIS
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
f'> the Citizen* of (Irtcntboro.
FBBa THE - > 'II. AS TIUFSE
Clwrged t.j otber CiactieinK
Pttjfride&tt of tie City.
May S6ih, ItfJMy.
JAMES P. HAYES,
Denier in
COTTON, HIDES. FURS, WOOL,
Beeswax, Tallow, Sheep, Goat
and Dear Skius,
Old Metals, Dried Fruit, Peaa,
Boner, Rags, Factory Waste, 4c,
KALtll.ll. N. C.
Refers to kdcigh National Bank and Stale
Nationmall Bank. Raleigh. N' C.
Law st'houlN.
"'■ . • 1: i--. Market street.
I' i II ,. S
l'ii>l< -Nlunal raids.
A 1 1 ,i,i. Attorney at Law.
k Culdweli, ""
. Phj -ti-uni A Bnrgeon.
« in.;, -aic and Retail Crsaccwa.
. Bro. S.-ntii El 111 It.
I. W. f A I ,- , "
n au. n >laker», Etc.
• ■ I. Eli
Business Directory.
< n.ii.1. ■ 1 and HallorH,
1 A ' '.'7 '
l.aie .... V. U.
(.l.UtUII •-..'.. 'I. I. ll..|H». A.1 .
. V\ 1 lll'lig
II1.II. 1 in -.. Hitia • .v«.
- ■ atreet.
•n .nci business Directory,
■ ': :h and D« 1. st
R0S
AI
D
AI
LI
S
QSAPAIJg
"FiTE GREAT ^CTHEUN
E REMEDY «sr the ears sfSsrof-
.lih Hia»IHa. ScrofaloM Talat, Vlo-
•ill.a.. Waits SwelUa«,6eat, Osltre,
tuiiuMintloD, BrouchitU, Nerroas De-l.
llitT, HaUria, aad all Mssases arlllat;
Irom aa Inpara coadltlaa of Us blood,
ikla or teals.
ROSADALIS
CERES SIROFIXA.
ROSADALIS
Cnre* RhrarnniUn.
ROSADALIS
OHM Syphilis.
ROSADALIS
Cures Mularlu. •
ROSADALIS
r.Tf \rrroui Debility.
ROSADALIS
CITIES tOXSEMPTIO>.
1 :. ..1 i :. -. &c.
; , .M:.in Street.
WORTH & HAMMOND,
tSJJati. HILL, N. C
<:usi; ,.. )iithK,<£t.,&c
123,004) 1-1 .
hSlD LUiiBEH.,
sat -:, • rv pries*. All
mpl a;le„li„:, Loc».
•-' -ui to the North Carolina
Mi .1. 1 Redding, to our rswular
1.1 Bnali Hill. Corres- - !
ROSADALIS
IM Ingrcdlenl* puhltebM on rrrrr
lackitffp, &T.4.W it to jour 1'by-lrUin. ■Bd
si.- *m tf'l you It In CODII<OMXI OC IM
str«nir,^t itt.Ti.tlvm that exlirt, and U an
lXMUmt Hlon.l l'-.irlirr.
KOsVD\USta«o!dby all r--J^V^'J-lf
«b. 1-,-^IL,
WOKili A HAMMOND.
BAKER'S PAR PANACEA
For MAX and BEAST.
External and Internal.
i... mii.ATi-.--r i-Mx RKur.vnR ur THE AGE.
MoH's Liver Pills. TUT OR£Al V»«iFTAriX CATHAT.TIC
aakJCLATOB.
Dr. Rogers'
Vegetable WORM SYRUP
Ic-t Jitly .: - t.-ovj WORMS, and li rtv.n.m'ndrd
by j.hy dctaiu a; th.- bcrt *t »K.-i MU>1C*»E.
r?^F.ir -nlr by all Draxr1"1"
JOHN K. IIEXRY, CI'RRAN A CO.,
bOtx iTtontiiTOu*,
.U College Placet New » ork.
R. T. FUL6HDH, Editor aad Prop'r.
GREENSBORO, N. C,
WrdniKlai, Kept. 9tt 184SO.
—The Gresnbeoksrs of Alshama bare
decidsd not to pot sn electoral lickst in the
nets.
—It is said there Is a probability ot a
fusion between th* Democrats and Green-baakers
in Indiana. Now Ibis will nerer do.
Whsrs Is General Wearsr T
—The Republican leaders are not offering
the negro Toter forty scree and a mute <i,uite
as liberally as thsy were a few years ago.
Real estate has goo* up aad a.ules ain't as
numsroas as thsy acsd to be.
—The Demoerau hare a military man on
a peace platform, the Bspublioans a clellian
on a war platform. That'a one difference.
Oae wan Is peace and harmony, lbs otber
endless strtae and dieeord. Which ought
the good sitissn endorse I
—"Let us bsee peace" Is ths wsy Senator
Conkling began his speech at the Academy
of Mnsie in New York last Friday night.
And then he went on to show how snxtous
be was for It by making a moot Tindictire
and rancorous speech.
— We are glad to learn that the manag-ers
of the State Fair at Raleigh, are tak-ing
steps to have an ample supply of par*
water for visitors, whieb will be an agree-able
announcement to the publio. Gen-erally
speaking the managers of faira
consider a supply ol beer, cVo, more es-sential
than water.
—The Beaa>» informs us that Maine is
longitudinally oowa Instead of up. Well it
Is down for Uancook loo and that being so we
don't care a continental about its longitudi-nal
status. As the Beacon has discovered
that Maine is longitudinally down perhaps it
can tell ns bow it is latitudinal^.
— If,as Blaiue said in his despatch to
Oarfield, Mr Barnani walked into Maine
with bis "barl" and gobbled up 8,000
Republican voters, in a few da} s thue
oarrying the Slate, It aeema to us they
would feel right uneasy about the little
majority of 2,747 which Hayes got IU Ohio
In 1 iTf.. If be is aa successful a trader as
they say he is it won't take iiuite three
days to gather them in.
—We rsturu thsnks to Cspt C B Deueo n,
Secretary if the North Carolina Agricultural
Society, lor an invitation to tbs lair, beg-.n-ring
at Raleigh October l*h and continuing
till the i'Jrd. The Sscrelary iutorms ue tkst
lbe prospects for a fine ezhikitiea were never
LS flattering aa they are U..W, which we are
glad to hear, for as a North Coroliua institu-tion
we have always tsksu an inte-e-t in the
State Fair.
- The Philadelphia Timt$ of Thursday,
Br-ptembri XM, gives an extsaaivd and
graphic acc-unt ->f ihe we come extended
in th.t city to th* meitilM-te .-t the Pan
Pieabjterian Couueil t . * "le". .nlhere,
last Wedueenev 8Vel.iu»;. U waea bril-liant
aou gotgeou* affair which will long
be remembered by tho recipients of it.
It took place in thefAcademy of Fine
Arts which wae brilliantly illnminated
and decoratsd with tbe emblems of differ-ent
oountries represented, embracing
nearly all in the civilized world. Speeches
in response to the weleomiug address
were made by a nnmber of distinguished
delegates from this aud otber eonntries.
Organization.
We publish elsewhere from the
Charlotte Democrat whose editor
lor cool judgment and good (tease
has DO superior iu these parts, an
article on the dot; of Democrats to
organize and support tbe organiza-tion
of lbe party, every word of
which is true and worthy of tbe at-tention
of every Democrat In the
State. As Democrats no matter
whether we dwell near or tar apart
oar Interests are mutual, and our
duties imperative. Let there be no
straggling from the ranks bnt iu
solid colamu let as march to battle
and victory.
Fusion and Confusion-
The fusion between the Green-backers
and Democrats iu Maine
led to such confusion and disaster
among the Republicans that they
decided at the Greenback State
convention at Portland on Tuesday
Bept, 21, to continue the fnse and
cast their votes with the Democrats
for Hancock. Thiaishad :u-.. ■ .,,:
the Republicans whose only hope
of making anything like a figbt in
November depended upon a split
in tbe Greenback anil Democratic
forces, and that hope is gone glim-mering.
Paying Too Much.
When it is kuowu that the Amer-ican
people pay in one way or an-other
between three and four bun
dred millions of dollars annually as
'ax'» to the Federal government,
Juu't u look as if they were wiving
a little too much li'r the privilege
of living uudei Radical role I
Since tbe war ineie has been
money enough, collected Irom tbe
people to pay the National debt
twice and have a considerable bal-ance
left, if it bad been judiciously
and honestly managed.
What Ooaa Thia Mean ?
At tbe Greenback Convention In
Chicago the following reaolntioa
was adopted with applause:
"Wedeclare that land, light, air
and water are The free gifts ol
nature to all mankind and any law
or custom of society that allows
any person to monopolize more of
these gifts than he ka$ a right to to
the detriment of the rights of oth-ers
we earnestly condemn and seek,
to abolish.'' Now what does this
meant It deserve* serious consid-eration.
It waa paeaed amid great
applause by the Greenback Con! *£* commou ,hea ,he next 8teP
will be that all property most be
vention and yet it is left oat of the"
platform. Why keep it out T
Why is it not published in auy
of tbe Greenback papers except In
tbe Irtih World T Why are tbe
people left in ignorance! Let na
examine the question fairly. Tbe
Irith World, a Greenback paper
and a supporter of.that party, says,'
that one ol the principles of their
party that should have been in tbe
platform is "That all. men have an
inherent right to an equitable share
of the soil and all the natural
elements." It grows angry because
this and otber extreme views are
not in the platform and says far-ther,
"That the platform is tbe
most worthless document ever
produced by a general convention
of men who professed to be reform-ers,
and as a declaration of princi-ple
is worse than a failure. • •
* The party has appealed
to prejudice rather than reason-it
knows loo mucli about expedien-cy
and too little about principle."
This throws a flood of light upou
the resolution. The Irith World
represents that portion ul the party
that are extreme in all their views
ami are making i.tpid strides upon
communism. These-men must not
be diiven off.
There is another wing of the
party that is more conservative
that could not accept this resolution
in the platlorm and they would
have noi.e. A compromise is made ;
it is left out of the platform which
is to go to every part of the L'uion,
but is giveu in tbe shape ot a resol'i
tion at tbe end of the nominations to
satisfy the extremes, and hence the
2>i«/i World says thai tbe part*
has sacrificed principle to expedi
eoey—ibo resolution, however,
brought harmony. The World
supports the party because of it.
the more couservative because it is
uot in tbe platform.
Now what does it mean 1 Every-man
has tbe right aa tbe tree gilt
of nature to as much air, light aud
water as he needs, these are essen-tial
to life aud DO man can be
rightfully deprived of them. So
as to damage or endanger life
except in tbe way of a panisbment
for crime, but the resolution goes
further: it declares that mau has
the same inherent right to land
that he has to air, light and water,
and condemns and pledges tbe party
to abolish any law that interferes
with this right. Every mau shall
have as much as he has a right to.
How much is this! We are uo:
definitely iuformed, but as each
mau is eutitled to as mnch air,
light and water as be personally
needs, so each mau is entitled to as
much laud as he can individually
work, this much and no more ; at
auy rate there must be sou.e power
to say bow much a mau Is to have,
whether it is City, one hundred
or five hundred acres. Now the
law makes land property, and like
all property it cau be gained only
by labcr aud economy, and when
so acquired be is protected 'jy tbe
law in the full eujoymeut ol it all.
He is entitled to ail he can boy and
pay for, upon it he baild-i liisdwel
lings, and bis store houses, ami
bams, plants bis orchards, uud
adorns his grounds, and UJ tuaa
dare inieriere with him so loug as
he has the muniments of his title.
The law protects every man in bis
borne, it is his castle, and is
sacredly dedicated to him, but
while it does this it deprives no one.
A home is witliiu reach ol every
man who will work for it.
In the public lands of the nation
every man is entitled to a home-stead
by payiug the ejueuses ol
eutry. &&, which usually doe* not
exceed $5. In North Caroluii Its.
average price ol lauds i* b. • *■ ■
glJ aut. #o pet acre, ami mere lo
an abundance io: all ; 'hose who
own would like t» seii, induetr,
and ecouomy cau soon secure a
homestead even here. But Ibis
resolution says yonr light to the
land is inherent and superior to a
made by law, and that tbe law
which now protects yon shall be
abolished, yonr deeds shall be can-celled
aud yonr home aud the home
of your children which has been
the object of so much love and
labor uutii u has become lovely
and attractive must be divided up
among men accordiug to their
inherent rights and iu such quanti-ties
as the party may determine is
right.
No man is safe under such
doctrine and every man is called
opon to see to it that such doctrines
shall not prevail. If land Is to be
held in common, and if one man
has more grain than he is entitled
to or more meat,or more goods than
he can use, then these mast be
seized aud given np to those who
have none, il the land is inherently
the property of all then all that is
produced on land and given by a
bountiful Providence must also be
shared by the needy and this with
or without the consent of him who'
by bis labors secured these bounties
from Providence.
Sneh doetrines are now held and
avowed iu some parts of tbe coun-try
and if not checked will become
dangerous to our institutions. If
the resolution does not mean this,
what does it mean t We would do
uo one injustice. Let all judge for
themselves and take warning in
time, If there is anything iu these
crude suggestions.
1 title i
Always in the Wrong-
Tbe Baltimoie SHU of Sept. 21st
has a very sensible article com-menting
on an editorial iu a late
issue of the New York Herald
about tbe "Solid" South. The
PATRIOT agrees with the Sun. The
peopie of tbe South will endorse
the article in question. We quote:
"The New York He>ald, with odd
persistence aud a son ot rcui-oi
iii.it u: bumptiousness, which has
become :,ecoud uature with uiauy
of the journals to lae iio.th of us—
as if they were right t-v virtue of
latitnde or some oth-rn reason over
which they have no control—takes
the South to task lor the sad blun-ler
«L..CII it has made and will not
nvi de Irom, in being "solid." *1'
;« al'iige'her wrung lor the Bomb
to do any such thing, says the
Herald, beside*, being iuinolitie i-i
fie last degie- lor this iHjpoteut
aud decaying «ection to vote ac-cording
to its own sentiments, and
thus array itself against the superi
or wisdom and intelligence of the
North. There is uo principle at
stake at all, says the Herald,
forgetting that if this were really
the case it would be as inseusate
to object to a "solid South" as it
is to march the hosts of the North
against it. But let us suppose, at
any rate, whether there be any real
principle at auke or uot, that the
South iiuagiues there is such a
principle, and that its solidity
uieaus simply that the people ol
that section are unanimous in
defending it; suppose, moreover,
that so many ot the democrats and
conservatives of the North believe
likewise that in New York, iu 187<>.
a majority of 40,000 voters, and m
Ohio the same year 321,589 voters
out ol a total of 050,771, agreed
with the solid South that there
was such a principle at stake, aud
that the solid South was defendtng
it in the spirit nl true patriotism—
what then ! Does it uot look as if
the solid South, when called upon
to abandon its solidity, to gi- • up
its principle! and disperse, i" en-titled
to answer as Paul ^.onis
Counter did when he beard it said
-hat banging ongh! to be abaudon
id aa judicial mnrder ami a relic ol
Barbarism—"(juv wuuieur* le*
dttauilU ccmmeM"it,~ lit; replied.
Il is in fact much easier and much
more rational to look upon tbe
solid Sooth as a standing protest
againot a wibr-'sntM grievance.
I....U aa a inne seiitiineuLal perais
teuce in a pig-headed and
suicidal policy. This grievance,
moreover, can be painted out and
its proportions disclosed in facts
furuished by those most bitterly
hostile to tbe solid South. The
llc-ald, for insiatice, wants the
s.. i\i .o oiaperae politically, to
ill vide np . a iiitlueurial men and
ui iit-sam i'ig the different parties
ii-i , . .n-.-i i.i thee are on;W»,.
parties, ..i -I the !"'iiu Booth is .1
protest ag 11 s; In opposite parly
as it »as oigauized and as it is
maintained iu tbe South. Tbe
South, let it be .Ustiuctly under-stood,
was made "solid" in the
course of the struggle for existence
forced upon it by the wretched
misrule which followed the close of
the war. It remains an-' mast
continue to be solid because the
opposite party there remains and
most continue to be what it is.
Would the i7frn.ef have Generals
Gibson and Hooker aud other men
it names go into political partner-ship
with Kellogg, Pincbbac't,
Warmoth, Casey, Packard, Ames T
Does it desire Senator Garland to
strike hands with Dorsey, or A. H.
Stephens to join Bullock or Wade
Hampton to fraternize with Cham
berlaiu aud Moses aud Patterson !
Tbeee classes are still the leaders
of the party wbioh tbe ferwAi
wants the solid South to disperse
ioto. Why net call upon the
rogues and carpet-baggers to.dis-perse
a little before desirmg ity.
po.tte aimitaltu to disband f :u
Glass and Pottery.
We alladed a few da., a ago to 1 he.
opening 1.1 this place offered fur the
establishment of a manufactory ot
agricultural implements. There is
another industry to which we would
like to caD attention aad that |a life
maiiutacture of,3ptfitrTy and glas
ware, that material for both of which
exists in the greatest abundance.
Tbe deposits ot Kaoliae of the
finest quality, wbieb In England
would be regarded as of inestimable
value, are large aad uumeruus,.sup-plying
the matenul for tbe hiieet
kind of china ware, and at- a
ptice merely nominal. Labor, t'.H
and every thiug necessary for lbe
baatuees is cheap; shipping lacillius
good, a vast territory lor a market,
and we do not see why capital
would not pay aud enterprise io
this direction be regarded.
Let Business Have Peace
[Philadelphia Tim-*, Sept St ]
Wheu carpetbag rule was s:i
prenie in the South, six years ago,
and sectional hate abounding in
tbe North the South produced
3,800,000 bales of cotton. Tin
cotton crop ot the last year, when
there wero no sectional and prot'i
gate State governments to irden
industry, is 5,SOO,0UO bales, and the
present crop is estimated at 0,000,-
000. Let business have peace.
The late Hon T. H. Benton.
"Col. Thomas Han Benton. for
thirty years a distinguished United
States Senator from Missouri, and
who was a Titan among the intel-lectual
giants of his day," writes a
correspondent of the Baltimore
Oazette, "would never allow his
name to be used as a Presidential
candidate, because while a lad at
college a $20 bill which had been
lost by oue of bis fellow-students
was touud upon his person, conceal
ed in bis cravat. In the light ol
subsequent events 'Old Bullion*ap
pears to have been ovi 1 fastidious.
Were he living to-day tbe aforesaid
youthful indiscretion aonld be con-sidered
by his political friends as a
mere diminutive speck of mud "—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
It was a much mole serious mat-ter
with Col. Benton 'ban the al« -e
account in.licates. He was a boy,
was at the University of N ■
Carolina, was charged with
was expelled 1'iimtlie Plitlan 1.
ic Society, and when youag lefi Ihe
State aud became one 01 the com-manding
intelleeta of bis time.
Therj was no giound for supposing
him iuuoccut. His school-mates
aud trieuds of the same literary so
ciety would never have disgraced
him witn an expulsion il there had
been reasonable gioiinds lor belief
ing him innocent. He may have
out-grown the weakness ol making
a miatako as to mine and thine, aud
we suppose this was the last, il not
the ouly, theit he ever perpetrated,
us in a long political career we do
not think his personal hones'., was
ever involved. It was a sad case
of " youthful indiscretion" to put it
mild. Col. Beiitou was born ab u
three miles Irom Hillaboro, Orange
county. He was one of the great-eat
men ever born iu our State.—
l.'iimiHj/lon Star.
We have never believed Mr. Ben-ton
guilty of the charge made
against him by the Chapel Hill boys
111 old iimea. dome ol lue young
sprouts of that day were jealous 01
Bencoii's talents, aud tlid not give
l.iui a fair hearing.—Charlotte Demo
era t. ____^^_____
No Chance for Him
The Farmer and Meekat .'*. of s- * -' '••-
says: Uol John R Winaton will ,.' itlj
it.jiire himself by btscaadilscj foi I
ejeie. So lotlj as lid II.e-K V SdVOCBlt
Greenback views, and fooght the Gold
hug-Bond Holder... he bad the good
of hundred;, of person* wh-- will c
hiui, sad eoapact him ofbeing bribed, if
bis candidacy abould jeopardise General
.Scales' election, ol elucl keogb. i". M
part, if tho ciic-iu. -ore* ■•••ie.l'h .-..:.
wo ahouid he Well satisfied Ul .« - C-».
Winston succeed in hie i-piralious; but
at present lliere is ooch •■ : ir kim
anything bat uaiuagc :..-...-: leyQention
An Important Movement.
[Cor. of News and Observer. ]
One of the most important en-terprises
this State has ever taken
in hand is the Cape Fear aud "fad-kin
Valley Narrow Gauge Railway-
It is so for many reasons, among
others, these:
1. That it follows Ihe natural
i-liaunel of the earliest aud largest
internal train.: between the middle
and mountain region aud tbe sea
board, and connects tbe Blue Ridge
with Atlantic steam navigation by
a line of only 150 miles, the shortest
south of Ktiluii-m.l.
2. That it briugs the products ot
tbe highest plateau in the Atlantic
Stales (i. t. products ol the extreme
not hern States and Canada), within
twenty-four boors of lite aubtropi
cal region and products of theOape
liar, and so within easy reach ol
fie products of Ike West Indies;
also-through tbe port of Wilmiug
ton, ooe .ol the best grocery mar-kers
btVun Atlantic coast.
3. That it opens to Ihe world's
markets the resources, agricultural,
mineral aud uecbajiical, and ot
umber, of a large and very vari-ously
rich and wholly new region
•■I trie State.
4. That it makes accessible • to
SIHUDW travel a picturesque aad
■ ilUbnooe umunl.tin plateau, which
l<s" the fin.-st summer climate east
ol the Mississippi.
5. That it brings the' grPat Ap
pslacbian Valley of the continent.
jiMSt Tennessee and Virginia, with
»s untoM Wealth ol coal, iron aud
tiliiln-i, aud 11- immense .1g11c.1l
tural products-), into easy and rapid
communication with th» Atlantic
seaboard b\ the shortest practical
route; '
6. .That it tlins bungs also the
great northwest, with its enormous
agricultural products, its unrivaled
energy and activity, iis mechanical
antrniannl.i''iiiring resources ami
skill into contact with the raw 111.1
terialf tor (he oue aad the markets
for the other.
Tbe importance of thia and tbe
con\ergiiig lines ol narrow g.nge
road In lliii State can hardly be
understood without some knowl-edge
of railroad and ind-ist'ial
movements outsit'..' ol tu.- State.
Very Iruitful lo facts and sngges
tiona bearing on these point:. ».i* 1
convention of narrow gange rail
road men (and Oi parties interested
in .lie development •-! ihe great
iron aad coal deposits d the great
valley legion) thai assembled last
week at Johnson City and Iristol,
silling one day at each pi ice. The
MO Virginias were represented,"the
t«o Caroiinaa, Tennessee, Ken-tucky,
Obio and Pennsylvania. I;
was found to the surpri-,- and ^ -i'i
lieation ol all parlies I bat there is
already outlined and in pait exe-cuted
a really continental system
ot narrow gauge roads siuiulliine-ouslv,
though independently in
augnrated, converging from all
directions upon this same objective
point. Iu addition to the Pittsbarg
Southern, to which I called public
attention last February, and the
New River road, connetting the
Chesapeake audObio load wifi Ihe
Virginia aud East Tennessee road
and the Danville and New Bivci
toad, -ill ot which Mere then iu
progress, and.were discussed, and
our own three lines ol road, the
Chester and Lemur, ami the Cape
Fear and Vadkui Valley, with its
Mt. Any branch—besides tbeee
there is ih" Cranberry road, on
which work was commenced last
week, and tbe contract eonoladed
to li'ii h it bj nexl August; the
■. ul Irom Briafol northwest to
liigslone Gap, fcJ miles, to a point
ear tb<- Kentucky line, also under
raci iu i partly built, ami
be cmnpi.-ied in a veal; the
1 ..el from lbe Ohio River np
the Big Sandy to the same point;
another road just surveyed from
Sal1 iile through the Clinch Moui.t
am-, to near the same gup: anil
beyond this, a road Irom Cincinnati
uid another from Louisville con
veiging lowatds the same point ; -i
road, much ■>! it already built, Irom
Cincinnati to Chicago, ami 150
miles more 10 Is finished within a
year; another road prijected lioni
Chicago to Uurtinglou, with .nau-.n
es to ot. Louis and Cairo: not to
mention tbe Iticbmond and South
western, and other schemes wl uli
have not assumed sninctently deti
nite shape as yel todesetdown. Au '.
tbe people of Bristol seieaouiu Ii
Impre sed with the maguitnd. a d
constqueuce ol these movementa
ibat ihej held amass meeting, Ihe
. ext 11 iy niter ihe com • ntion a
journtd, t-- take action in regard ■->
pushing .'. coun ction with tbi
i'; nberr 1 . I. This leavi 1 u ■
oi.lv a gap of some forty milesjfrom
Patterson 1*1 <_':..nberry, 10 fill up,
ami 110 rjwet'iin doubt that thl ■
1,- .. -..'. .. un lertak n i-i tbi ■ m
Don interest of all the ■ uuveigiiig
lines from south at..i north, eas
;. id west.
Tm com] letiuu ..1 lbe uan «
g iuge road il n ugh the mi Used
I I S' u
to tbe g.ei Ilej, !ii Oui
and tl ■ ^i> a luki 1 and -,. ••
Mi: .1 ■: ;M i, may I m . . ti i. .
1.1 ;• •- • ol ol.- '- WO 01 ' .:. . ;. . -
For a snmm 11 ■ ol the advant c ■
1 1 1. - : ad, 30 Ui us it lies wii i:.
1 - .- ate and its benefits :o thi
region iu rersed, and to the whole
State, let me call yont atteali in ■
1. 1 jit on -'. is special depai 10"'
of the . ji-' t iiu'ili-li"! 1.- .he
au boritu - - hi road.
W. C K
Raleigh, N. C, Sept. 20, •*>.
The Pan-Presbyterian Counoll.
[Baltimore Baa.]
PnTi.ATVF.i.rniA, Sept 23.—The
delegates to the Pan-Presbyterian
council assembled this morning in
the Chambers Presbyterian Church,
Broad and Sansom streets, and,
lorniing 111 eonplea, marched to the
Academy of Music, about a square
below, wheie the opening sermon
was pleached by Rev. Wm. M.
Paxton, I). I).," of New York.
After interesting devotional exerci-ses
Hen. ilartrantt and Col. A.
Louden Snowden assisted in organ-izing
tbe processon Irom the church
to the academy. The latter build
ing was crowded from pnrquette to
dome, and marked attention was
paid to the remarks of Dr. Paxton,
who took his text Irom Matthew
viii, l': "And 1 say unto you that
many shall come from tbe east aud
west aud sit down with Abraham
and Isaac and Jacob iu the King
dom of Heaven." The speaker,
after au eloquent Opening, dwelt at
length upon the (last history and
future mission of Presbyterian-ism,
aud closed with a feeling
reference tq tbe death of Rev, Wm.
Adams, D.D., who delivered the
■last prayer, and pronounced the
lalst benediction at the close of the
Uist meeting of thr-AliianAokt Edin-burgh,
irr 1S77. The first btisrness.
in-etiiig was held this alteration at
Ifortii iiltnritl Hull, when Dr. Win.
Breed delivered an address ot
wel.i-me. A aantnon was also belli
this evening, when papers weii-read
by Prof. K. 1) Hitchcock, of
■N|ew York, on "The Ceremonial.
the Moral and the Emotional in
Christian Lite;"' by ltoberl Bainey,
JI. D , nl Edinburgh. 00 "Modern
Theological Though'." and b> Rei.
U. G. M. liiaut, ot Kingston,Cana
tla, on "iteiiguu iu Secular Affairs."
JBPV, l>r. Bliiikie, from tbe commil
tee on statistics, reported I hat be
had a tabula** I sfa ement, which
covered ststt-"f« ol 31 eliutches, nl
which 13 aie on Un- continent ot
Kuiope. 0 in the United Kingdom,
Ii .1 the United States and li in the
Biitish colonies. Prof. Roawell
I). Hitchcock, I). D., read .1 paper
on ""The Ceremonial, the Moral ol
and 1 lie Emotional in Christian Life
and Worship.'' Principal K iberl
Ki.iney, ol Edinburgh, read*paper
on "Modern Theological Th lughta,"
aad l'iI.I-IJI 1 (1...... -»t K igston,
i 1 ida, oue on "R 'liglou In Seen
lai Life."
The Faah.ouablo Beauty in
Turkoy-
[From lbe Tei Bai 1
Firal as to Turkish be.nines,
about whom so much has been writ
.en and so li'ii.-1.-ali> known. Are
... \ indeed the bouris we have
in. 11 taught in considei them ; Are
they the timid, geutle, gazellelike
partners nl their jealous lords I
Alas! poets and dramatists have
very much misled us: their ehiel
beauty is iu the mystery thai sur-rounds
them; aud tbe closer we see
them, both physically and morally,
lbe leas do wi admire. In general
they have oval laces, clear olive
-kins, languishing dark eyes ami
beantilnl bands, soft a-- velvet and
white as snon—beyond 'ins, uotfa
ing. They lack tbe natural grace
and pretty coqdetry ol our Levan-tine
belles and the firm tread, ele-gant
manners and becoming modes
iy ol Ivnopean women. The figures
are clumsy, theii leal urea - imewhal
haish, then lips Inli -iti-l otlen thick;
they walk with a roll (their legs
being bowed), and even th ii natur
al attractions depend it.":.- ui less
upon artificial aid. Tney thickly
powdei their laces, blacken their
brows aud dye theii eyelids and
lashes. ?-> that when bail veiled by
ihe yashmak sun en Ihej are 011
lainly striking and present 1 daz
zllng effe-rt; but under othei cir
i:um*'anees mnm ol 'hem would
pass unobserved.
The Greenback Candi
V.'e -1 • by the iu lbe
/,.„, ,/i 1 hat Col. M (ion lias de
cidi il to 1:.'. 1 ' he race lor I
in tbi.. di-tit'' .1- thf '■ it.-lidate ot
the lit.Ti.fi.il-'-- 1' -■' nn limn
the coi re ipondi ni -■ pnl ihi I I
:i-- Iiesitati d • 1 anm h
||el| to '
oiiilee ol tiir.-i t. - -
Why don 1 ■ in Col
onel join tin n
wl,ippt ig the II nl ' iu nl the
. -.;:.:. Judg.11 tie o|
his papi ■. the ft •■ on,
cal at hee.r t and 1
ing to :■ I lise 1 h li ling
behind lie 'back
|, ,1 li 1! 11 hi II ■'■ is anj
lui .1 p itting . 11 '• ni-didate
' ■ lie ..---■■ lied about
ami bu i< ■' '
..... ..„.,..-1 ■■ . • S
let liim.ei
thl..: ■ ' ' ' 1 ' IVP
bm dretl von r^in 1 ■ • 1
—Iiurham 7'..'-"- <v PI '
- A de.
.
Ihe -'■'■•-
"
■ f niu'
.-''■'. I
lu ■ ■ ■■ . •■;•■ ■.
.11 '
i ■'
, . •-
m
After U -' •• •
■ ■
ij-nl kllOWII : tu '

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patriot-1880-09-29

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The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, PO Box 26170, Greensboro NC 27402-6170, 336.334.5304

TT / P
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Established in 1821. GKEENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1880. New Series No. 648.
OJTNtsboro |3aii|iot.
I —I 111* WKFM.V AT
I ■ N-RBORO. >f. C.
- mli Kim St.
:■.:•;=;.•
:. - . al.CC
: ice month, free
inn ■ i u aea -
, ; Circulation is large
igenipor-extraordinary
I .v k 1 in" ■- mo -t in" 8 n">| 1 >'•
Miscellaneous.
I1.-..0O
80 (KJ
30.00
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40.00
uo.oo
110.00
i.v».oo
i V » M 1
i IO.OO l.'i.oo
18 ■"' 80.00
; Ml 12.0(1 ir..i I 84.00
3 00 30.00
24.00 4l).iin
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licea I-". cento per line for first
: Uj pel hue fur each sab-rtioB.
mi .' inserted for less than
_
tementa payable in ad-ill;
advertisetnente quarterly
lix weeks, f7, Magistrates]
• i.: weeks, j.'.; Administrators'
I *\ i.l.-, s.I..'," —i» advance.
rates foi doable colanin a.lvor-
Creensboro Business Directory.
tuili uHural luuilemeula,
lliii ilvture. 4tc-.
A i . iM ' '■• * ,"1' Elm ■"'•
u II vVakelield & Co., Booth Elm at.
.', >. .: ton,
i • i. YJ ....
Hooka aad Mallonory.
. -. South B'm »t.
Ill l< I. HlllkN, fcC.
-■- . V. - ; Depot.
WEAVER BROS.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
mid dealers in
GENERAL MERCHANDISE.
Connigivnenls of Produce Solicited.
Quick sales aud prompt returns. Refer-ences
if denred. Wilmington 8t.
KALEIOH, M.C
March. 17. jSO 3m.
LAW SCHOOL.
OREEN8BORO, N. C.
For information aa to terms, Jtc.japply to
JOHN II DILLARD,
Jan 7 1SS0 ROBERT P DICK.
ALt'RCIl M. M..I.H : i. *. nX.NDIRHOX :
SCALES & HENDERSON,
AtlunnT-.-AI-l.uw.
QUBMBOtto, - - • N. C.
Practice in the State and Federal Coarta.
Will attend to holiness heretofore entrust-ed
to Scales &• Scales anises othorwise
directed. Oflico in the Court House.
Greensboro, N. C, Sept. 14, 'oo.-ly-d. w.
E. ID. STJZJEIJE;
AITOllMIV AT LAW
ORKKXSBORO, N. C.
Will practice in Slate and Federal Courts.
CT Collections a Specialty.^! 696-1/
Attorney at Law,
Creensboro, - - • N. 4J.
Will practice in State and.Fsderal Courts.
Prompt attention given to all business en-r
usted to him.
iyCollection ol claims a speoi ally.
Dec. 3. Is7» I7.
J11. W. liWt.1. R. K. MHO
ICiinUliig It onsen.
H ink -I Ureeual 8. I. m Bt
|>r) 1.t.
I...-: Mai kei -t.
ith Lira at.
■-. i; M Market -t
.. ,-■ Mo ...-t St.
.
1,1 ui -I-I-. i:: ..(in Machine shops
mi,lit wo, V\ uhmguH
1 lull lien. lint's, *,»-.
Pomona 1111: Nonaries—
S. .. II.-- 1
l'ui-iitliue,_i:u-.
i: rorbie A Bro., McAdoo lb-use
ui St.
■larneHN aud BsuMsmr*.
Leu Hi 1M1 ■'. South Klin st,
Jobbers In Notions, ic.
A i'».., South Kim St.
liwdtl, Ml*»•!-«art, Etc
: 1 a Soath Kim st.
GLENN & KING,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Will practioe in the State and Federal
Coarta All hueiuess promptly stlended to.
rtr"C-.l lections a specialty.
July 15.--.lin.
I.KVI M. SCOTT. WALTCR P. C1LUWUI
w
-< 41 I I A VALDWELL.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
ILL practice in the Superier Court ot
TV Gtiilfnrd, Alatnance, Randolph. David-s.-
ti, Forsyth, Kowan, Iredell aud Iseeklsn-hurg.
Also in the Supreme Court of the
State; in the Federal Court at Greensboro
and Stateaville, iuBaukruptry,aud In courts
atChamhers.
Special attention given to loans of money
on Mtirt^'.u.'eandithersecurities.
lebllMy.
Dr. K. H. (Gregory
RESPECTFULLY
OFFERS HIS
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
f'> the Citizen* of (Irtcntboro.
FBBa THE - > 'II. AS TIUFSE
Clwrged t.j otber CiactieinK
Pttjfride&tt of tie City.
May S6ih, ItfJMy.
JAMES P. HAYES,
Denier in
COTTON, HIDES. FURS, WOOL,
Beeswax, Tallow, Sheep, Goat
and Dear Skius,
Old Metals, Dried Fruit, Peaa,
Boner, Rags, Factory Waste, 4c,
KALtll.ll. N. C.
Refers to kdcigh National Bank and Stale
Nationmall Bank. Raleigh. N' C.
Law st'houlN.
"'■ . • 1: i--. Market street.
I' i II ,. S
l'ii>l< -Nlunal raids.
A 1 1 ,i,i. Attorney at Law.
k Culdweli, ""
. Phj -ti-uni A Bnrgeon.
« in.;, -aic and Retail Crsaccwa.
. Bro. S.-ntii El 111 It.
I. W. f A I ,- , "
n au. n >laker», Etc.
• ■ I. Eli
Business Directory.
< n.ii.1. ■ 1 and HallorH,
1 A ' '.'7 '
l.aie .... V. U.
(.l.UtUII •-..'.. 'I. I. ll..|H». A.1 .
. V\ 1 lll'lig
II1.II. 1 in -.. Hitia • .v«.
- ■ atreet.
•n .nci business Directory,
■ ': :h and D« 1. st
R0S
AI
D
AI
LI
S
QSAPAIJg
"FiTE GREAT ^CTHEUN
E REMEDY «sr the ears sfSsrof-
.lih Hia»IHa. ScrofaloM Talat, Vlo-
•ill.a.. Waits SwelUa«,6eat, Osltre,
tuiiuMintloD, BrouchitU, Nerroas De-l.
llitT, HaUria, aad all Mssases arlllat;
Irom aa Inpara coadltlaa of Us blood,
ikla or teals.
ROSADALIS
CERES SIROFIXA.
ROSADALIS
Cnre* RhrarnniUn.
ROSADALIS
OHM Syphilis.
ROSADALIS
Cures Mularlu. •
ROSADALIS
r.Tf \rrroui Debility.
ROSADALIS
CITIES tOXSEMPTIO>.
1 :. ..1 i :. -. &c.
; , .M:.in Street.
WORTH & HAMMOND,
tSJJati. HILL, N. C
1C*»E.
r?^F.ir -nlr by all Draxr1"1"
JOHN K. IIEXRY, CI'RRAN A CO.,
bOtx iTtontiiTOu*,
.U College Placet New » ork.
R. T. FUL6HDH, Editor aad Prop'r.
GREENSBORO, N. C,
WrdniKlai, Kept. 9tt 184SO.
—The Gresnbeoksrs of Alshama bare
decidsd not to pot sn electoral lickst in the
nets.
—It is said there Is a probability ot a
fusion between th* Democrats and Green-baakers
in Indiana. Now Ibis will nerer do.
Whsrs Is General Wearsr T
—The Republican leaders are not offering
the negro Toter forty scree and a mute » informs us that Maine is
longitudinally oowa Instead of up. Well it
Is down for Uancook loo and that being so we
don't care a continental about its longitudi-nal
status. As the Beacon has discovered
that Maine is longitudinally down perhaps it
can tell ns bow it is latitudinal^.
— If,as Blaiue said in his despatch to
Oarfield, Mr Barnani walked into Maine
with bis "barl" and gobbled up 8,000
Republican voters, in a few da} s thue
oarrying the Slate, It aeema to us they
would feel right uneasy about the little
majority of 2,747 which Hayes got IU Ohio
In 1 iTf.. If be is aa successful a trader as
they say he is it won't take iiuite three
days to gather them in.
—We rsturu thsnks to Cspt C B Deueo n,
Secretary if the North Carolina Agricultural
Society, lor an invitation to tbs lair, beg-.n-ring
at Raleigh October l*h and continuing
till the i'Jrd. The Sscrelary iutorms ue tkst
lbe prospects for a fine ezhikitiea were never
LS flattering aa they are U..W, which we are
glad to hear, for as a North Coroliua institu-tion
we have always tsksu an inte-e-t in the
State Fair.
- The Philadelphia Timt$ of Thursday,
Br-ptembri XM, gives an extsaaivd and
graphic acc-unt ->f ihe we come extended
in th.t city to th* meitilM-te .-t the Pan
Pieabjterian Couueil t . * "le". .nlhere,
last Wedueenev 8Vel.iu»;. U waea bril-liant
aou gotgeou* affair which will long
be remembered by tho recipients of it.
It took place in thefAcademy of Fine
Arts which wae brilliantly illnminated
and decoratsd with tbe emblems of differ-ent
oountries represented, embracing
nearly all in the civilized world. Speeches
in response to the weleomiug address
were made by a nnmber of distinguished
delegates from this aud otber eonntries.
Organization.
We publish elsewhere from the
Charlotte Democrat whose editor
lor cool judgment and good (tease
has DO superior iu these parts, an
article on the dot; of Democrats to
organize and support tbe organiza-tion
of lbe party, every word of
which is true and worthy of tbe at-tention
of every Democrat In the
State. As Democrats no matter
whether we dwell near or tar apart
oar Interests are mutual, and our
duties imperative. Let there be no
straggling from the ranks bnt iu
solid colamu let as march to battle
and victory.
Fusion and Confusion-
The fusion between the Green-backers
and Democrats iu Maine
led to such confusion and disaster
among the Republicans that they
decided at the Greenback State
convention at Portland on Tuesday
Bept, 21, to continue the fnse and
cast their votes with the Democrats
for Hancock. Thiaishad :u-.. ■ .,,:
the Republicans whose only hope
of making anything like a figbt in
November depended upon a split
in tbe Greenback anil Democratic
forces, and that hope is gone glim-mering.
Paying Too Much.
When it is kuowu that the Amer-ican
people pay in one way or an-other
between three and four bun
dred millions of dollars annually as
'ax'» to the Federal government,
Juu't u look as if they were wiving
a little too much li'r the privilege
of living uudei Radical role I
Since tbe war ineie has been
money enough, collected Irom tbe
people to pay the National debt
twice and have a considerable bal-ance
left, if it bad been judiciously
and honestly managed.
What Ooaa Thia Mean ?
At tbe Greenback Convention In
Chicago the following reaolntioa
was adopted with applause:
"Wedeclare that land, light, air
and water are The free gifts ol
nature to all mankind and any law
or custom of society that allows
any person to monopolize more of
these gifts than he ka$ a right to to
the detriment of the rights of oth-ers
we earnestly condemn and seek,
to abolish.'' Now what does this
meant It deserve* serious consid-eration.
It waa paeaed amid great
applause by the Greenback Con! *£* commou ,hea ,he next 8teP
will be that all property most be
vention and yet it is left oat of the"
platform. Why keep it out T
Why is it not published in auy
of tbe Greenback papers except In
tbe Irtih World T Why are tbe
people left in ignorance! Let na
examine the question fairly. Tbe
Irith World, a Greenback paper
and a supporter of.that party, says,'
that one ol the principles of their
party that should have been in tbe
platform is "That all. men have an
inherent right to an equitable share
of the soil and all the natural
elements." It grows angry because
this and otber extreme views are
not in the platform and says far-ther,
"That the platform is tbe
most worthless document ever
produced by a general convention
of men who professed to be reform-ers,
and as a declaration of princi-ple
is worse than a failure. • •
* The party has appealed
to prejudice rather than reason-it
knows loo mucli about expedien-cy
and too little about principle."
This throws a flood of light upou
the resolution. The Irith World
represents that portion ul the party
that are extreme in all their views
ami are making i.tpid strides upon
communism. These-men must not
be diiven off.
There is another wing of the
party that is more conservative
that could not accept this resolution
in the platlorm and they would
have noi.e. A compromise is made ;
it is left out of the platform which
is to go to every part of the L'uion,
but is giveu in tbe shape ot a resol'i
tion at tbe end of the nominations to
satisfy the extremes, and hence the
2>i«/i World says thai tbe part*
has sacrificed principle to expedi
eoey—ibo resolution, however,
brought harmony. The World
supports the party because of it.
the more couservative because it is
uot in tbe platform.
Now what does it mean 1 Every-man
has tbe right aa tbe tree gilt
of nature to as much air, light aud
water as he needs, these are essen-tial
to life aud DO man can be
rightfully deprived of them. So
as to damage or endanger life
except in tbe way of a panisbment
for crime, but the resolution goes
further: it declares that mau has
the same inherent right to land
that he has to air, light and water,
and condemns and pledges tbe party
to abolish any law that interferes
with this right. Every mau shall
have as much as he has a right to.
How much is this! We are uo:
definitely iuformed, but as each
mau is eutitled to as mnch air,
light and water as be personally
needs, so each mau is entitled to as
much laud as he can individually
work, this much and no more ; at
auy rate there must be sou.e power
to say bow much a mau Is to have,
whether it is City, one hundred
or five hundred acres. Now the
law makes land property, and like
all property it cau be gained only
by labcr aud economy, and when
so acquired be is protected 'jy tbe
law in the full eujoymeut ol it all.
He is entitled to ail he can boy and
pay for, upon it he baild-i liisdwel
lings, and bis store houses, ami
bams, plants bis orchards, uud
adorns his grounds, and UJ tuaa
dare inieriere with him so loug as
he has the muniments of his title.
The law protects every man in bis
borne, it is his castle, and is
sacredly dedicated to him, but
while it does this it deprives no one.
A home is witliiu reach ol every
man who will work for it.
In the public lands of the nation
every man is entitled to a home-stead
by payiug the ejueuses ol
eutry. &&, which usually doe* not
exceed $5. In North Caroluii Its.
average price ol lauds i* b. • *■ ■
glJ aut. #o pet acre, ami mere lo
an abundance io: all ; 'hose who
own would like t» seii, induetr,
and ecouomy cau soon secure a
homestead even here. But Ibis
resolution says yonr light to the
land is inherent and superior to a
made by law, and that tbe law
which now protects yon shall be
abolished, yonr deeds shall be can-celled
aud yonr home aud the home
of your children which has been
the object of so much love and
labor uutii u has become lovely
and attractive must be divided up
among men accordiug to their
inherent rights and iu such quanti-ties
as the party may determine is
right.
No man is safe under such
doctrine and every man is called
opon to see to it that such doctrines
shall not prevail. If land Is to be
held in common, and if one man
has more grain than he is entitled
to or more meat,or more goods than
he can use, then these mast be
seized aud given np to those who
have none, il the land is inherently
the property of all then all that is
produced on land and given by a
bountiful Providence must also be
shared by the needy and this with
or without the consent of him who'
by bis labors secured these bounties
from Providence.
Sneh doetrines are now held and
avowed iu some parts of tbe coun-try
and if not checked will become
dangerous to our institutions. If
the resolution does not mean this,
what does it mean t We would do
uo one injustice. Let all judge for
themselves and take warning in
time, If there is anything iu these
crude suggestions.
1 title i
Always in the Wrong-
Tbe Baltimoie SHU of Sept. 21st
has a very sensible article com-menting
on an editorial iu a late
issue of the New York Herald
about tbe "Solid" South. The
PATRIOT agrees with the Sun. The
peopie of tbe South will endorse
the article in question. We quote:
"The New York He>ald, with odd
persistence aud a son ot rcui-oi
iii.it u: bumptiousness, which has
become :,ecoud uature with uiauy
of the journals to lae iio.th of us—
as if they were right t-v virtue of
latitnde or some oth-rn reason over
which they have no control—takes
the South to task lor the sad blun-ler
«L..CII it has made and will not
nvi de Irom, in being "solid." *1'
;« al'iige'her wrung lor the Bomb
to do any such thing, says the
Herald, beside*, being iuinolitie i-i
fie last degie- lor this iHjpoteut
aud decaying «ection to vote ac-cording
to its own sentiments, and
thus array itself against the superi
or wisdom and intelligence of the
North. There is uo principle at
stake at all, says the Herald,
forgetting that if this were really
the case it would be as inseusate
to object to a "solid South" as it
is to march the hosts of the North
against it. But let us suppose, at
any rate, whether there be any real
principle at auke or uot, that the
South iiuagiues there is such a
principle, and that its solidity
uieaus simply that the people ol
that section are unanimous in
defending it; suppose, moreover,
that so many ot the democrats and
conservatives of the North believe
likewise that in New York, iu 187<>.
a majority of 40,000 voters, and m
Ohio the same year 321,589 voters
out ol a total of 050,771, agreed
with the solid South that there
was such a principle at stake, aud
that the solid South was defendtng
it in the spirit nl true patriotism—
what then ! Does it uot look as if
the solid South, when called upon
to abandon its solidity, to gi- • up
its principle! and disperse, i" en-titled
to answer as Paul ^.onis
Counter did when he beard it said
-hat banging ongh! to be abaudon
id aa judicial mnrder ami a relic ol
Barbarism—"(juv wuuieur* le*
dttauilU ccmmeM"it,~ lit; replied.
Il is in fact much easier and much
more rational to look upon tbe
solid Sooth as a standing protest
againot a wibr-'sntM grievance.
I....U aa a inne seiitiineuLal perais
teuce in a pig-headed and
suicidal policy. This grievance,
moreover, can be painted out and
its proportions disclosed in facts
furuished by those most bitterly
hostile to tbe solid South. The
llc-ald, for insiatice, wants the
s.. i\i .o oiaperae politically, to
ill vide np . a iiitlueurial men and
ui iit-sam i'ig the different parties
ii-i , . .n-.-i i.i thee are on;W»,.
parties, ..i -I the !"'iiu Booth is .1
protest ag 11 s; In opposite parly
as it »as oigauized and as it is
maintained iu tbe South. Tbe
South, let it be .Ustiuctly under-stood,
was made "solid" in the
course of the struggle for existence
forced upon it by the wretched
misrule which followed the close of
the war. It remains an-' mast
continue to be solid because the
opposite party there remains and
most continue to be what it is.
Would the i7frn.ef have Generals
Gibson and Hooker aud other men
it names go into political partner-ship
with Kellogg, Pincbbac't,
Warmoth, Casey, Packard, Ames T
Does it desire Senator Garland to
strike hands with Dorsey, or A. H.
Stephens to join Bullock or Wade
Hampton to fraternize with Cham
berlaiu aud Moses aud Patterson !
Tbeee classes are still the leaders
of the party wbioh tbe ferwAi
wants the solid South to disperse
ioto. Why net call upon the
rogues and carpet-baggers to.dis-perse
a little before desirmg ity.
po.tte aimitaltu to disband f :u
Glass and Pottery.
We alladed a few da., a ago to 1 he.
opening 1.1 this place offered fur the
establishment of a manufactory ot
agricultural implements. There is
another industry to which we would
like to caD attention aad that |a life
maiiutacture of,3ptfitrTy and glas
ware, that material for both of which
exists in the greatest abundance.
Tbe deposits ot Kaoliae of the
finest quality, wbieb In England
would be regarded as of inestimable
value, are large aad uumeruus,.sup-plying
the matenul for tbe hiieet
kind of china ware, and at- a
ptice merely nominal. Labor, t'.H
and every thiug necessary for lbe
baatuees is cheap; shipping lacillius
good, a vast territory lor a market,
and we do not see why capital
would not pay aud enterprise io
this direction be regarded.
Let Business Have Peace
[Philadelphia Tim-*, Sept St ]
Wheu carpetbag rule was s:i
prenie in the South, six years ago,
and sectional hate abounding in
tbe North the South produced
3,800,000 bales of cotton. Tin
cotton crop ot the last year, when
there wero no sectional and prot'i
gate State governments to irden
industry, is 5,SOO,0UO bales, and the
present crop is estimated at 0,000,-
000. Let business have peace.
The late Hon T. H. Benton.
"Col. Thomas Han Benton. for
thirty years a distinguished United
States Senator from Missouri, and
who was a Titan among the intel-lectual
giants of his day," writes a
correspondent of the Baltimore
Oazette, "would never allow his
name to be used as a Presidential
candidate, because while a lad at
college a $20 bill which had been
lost by oue of bis fellow-students
was touud upon his person, conceal
ed in bis cravat. In the light ol
subsequent events 'Old Bullion*ap
pears to have been ovi 1 fastidious.
Were he living to-day tbe aforesaid
youthful indiscretion aonld be con-sidered
by his political friends as a
mere diminutive speck of mud "—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
It was a much mole serious mat-ter
with Col. Benton 'ban the al« -e
account in.licates. He was a boy,
was at the University of N ■
Carolina, was charged with
was expelled 1'iimtlie Plitlan 1.
ic Society, and when youag lefi Ihe
State aud became one 01 the com-manding
intelleeta of bis time.
Therj was no giound for supposing
him iuuoccut. His school-mates
aud trieuds of the same literary so
ciety would never have disgraced
him witn an expulsion il there had
been reasonable gioiinds lor belief
ing him innocent. He may have
out-grown the weakness ol making
a miatako as to mine and thine, aud
we suppose this was the last, il not
the ouly, theit he ever perpetrated,
us in a long political career we do
not think his personal hones'., was
ever involved. It was a sad case
of " youthful indiscretion" to put it
mild. Col. Beiitou was born ab u
three miles Irom Hillaboro, Orange
county. He was one of the great-eat
men ever born iu our State.—
l.'iimiHj/lon Star.
We have never believed Mr. Ben-ton
guilty of the charge made
against him by the Chapel Hill boys
111 old iimea. dome ol lue young
sprouts of that day were jealous 01
Bencoii's talents, aud tlid not give
l.iui a fair hearing.—Charlotte Demo
era t. ____^^_____
No Chance for Him
The Farmer and Meekat .'*. of s- * -' '••-
says: Uol John R Winaton will ,.' itlj
it.jiire himself by btscaadilscj foi I
ejeie. So lotlj as lid II.e-K V SdVOCBlt
Greenback views, and fooght the Gold
hug-Bond Holder... he bad the good
of hundred;, of person* wh-- will c
hiui, sad eoapact him ofbeing bribed, if
bis candidacy abould jeopardise General
.Scales' election, ol elucl keogb. i". M
part, if tho ciic-iu. -ore* ■•••ie.l'h .-..:.
wo ahouid he Well satisfied Ul .« - C-».
Winston succeed in hie i-piralious; but
at present lliere is ooch •■ : ir kim
anything bat uaiuagc :..-...-: leyQention
An Important Movement.
[Cor. of News and Observer. ]
One of the most important en-terprises
this State has ever taken
in hand is the Cape Fear aud "fad-kin
Valley Narrow Gauge Railway-
It is so for many reasons, among
others, these:
1. That it follows Ihe natural
i-liaunel of the earliest aud largest
internal train.: between the middle
and mountain region aud tbe sea
board, and connects tbe Blue Ridge
with Atlantic steam navigation by
a line of only 150 miles, the shortest
south of Ktiluii-m.l.
2. That it briugs the products ot
tbe highest plateau in the Atlantic
Stales (i. t. products ol the extreme
not hern States and Canada), within
twenty-four boors of lite aubtropi
cal region and products of theOape
liar, and so within easy reach ol
fie products of Ike West Indies;
also-through tbe port of Wilmiug
ton, ooe .ol the best grocery mar-kers
btVun Atlantic coast.
3. That it opens to Ihe world's
markets the resources, agricultural,
mineral aud uecbajiical, and ot
umber, of a large and very vari-ously
rich and wholly new region
•■I trie State.
4. That it makes accessible • to
SIHUDW travel a picturesque aad
■ ilUbnooe umunl.tin plateau, which
l! it already built, Irom
Cincinnati to Chicago, ami 150
miles more 10 Is finished within a
year; another road prijected lioni
Chicago to Uurtinglou, with .nau-.n
es to ot. Louis and Cairo: not to
mention tbe Iticbmond and South
western, and other schemes wl uli
have not assumed sninctently deti
nite shape as yel todesetdown. Au '.
tbe people of Bristol seieaouiu Ii
Impre sed with the maguitnd. a d
constqueuce ol these movementa
ibat ihej held amass meeting, Ihe
. ext 11 iy niter ihe com • ntion a
journtd, t-- take action in regard ■->
pushing .'. coun ction with tbi
i'; nberr 1 . I. This leavi 1 u ■
oi.lv a gap of some forty milesjfrom
Patterson 1*1 a luki 1 and -,. ••
Mi: .1 ■: ;M i, may I m . . ti i. .
1.1 ;• •- • ol ol.- '- WO 01 ' .:. . ;. . -
For a snmm 11 ■ ol the advant c ■
1 1 1. - : ad, 30 Ui us it lies wii i:.
1 - .- ate and its benefits :o thi
region iu rersed, and to the whole
State, let me call yont atteali in ■
1. 1 jit on -'. is special depai 10"'
of the . ji-' t iiu'ili-li"! 1.- .he
au boritu - - hi road.
W. C K
Raleigh, N. C, Sept. 20, •*>.
The Pan-Presbyterian Counoll.
[Baltimore Baa.]
PnTi.ATVF.i.rniA, Sept 23.—The
delegates to the Pan-Presbyterian
council assembled this morning in
the Chambers Presbyterian Church,
Broad and Sansom streets, and,
lorniing 111 eonplea, marched to the
Academy of Music, about a square
below, wheie the opening sermon
was pleached by Rev. Wm. M.
Paxton, I). I).," of New York.
After interesting devotional exerci-ses
Hen. ilartrantt and Col. A.
Louden Snowden assisted in organ-izing
tbe processon Irom the church
to the academy. The latter build
ing was crowded from pnrquette to
dome, and marked attention was
paid to the remarks of Dr. Paxton,
who took his text Irom Matthew
viii, l': "And 1 say unto you that
many shall come from tbe east aud
west aud sit down with Abraham
and Isaac and Jacob iu the King
dom of Heaven." The speaker,
after au eloquent Opening, dwelt at
length upon the (last history and
future mission of Presbyterian-ism,
aud closed with a feeling
reference tq tbe death of Rev, Wm.
Adams, D.D., who delivered the
■last prayer, and pronounced the
lalst benediction at the close of the
Uist meeting of thr-AliianAokt Edin-burgh,
irr 1S77. The first btisrness.
in-etiiig was held this alteration at
Ifortii iiltnritl Hull, when Dr. Win.
Breed delivered an address ot
wel.i-me. A aantnon was also belli
this evening, when papers weii-read
by Prof. K. 1) Hitchcock, of
■N|ew York, on "The Ceremonial.
the Moral and the Emotional in
Christian Lite;"' by ltoberl Bainey,
JI. D , nl Edinburgh. 00 "Modern
Theological Though'." and b> Rei.
U. G. M. liiaut, ot Kingston,Cana
tla, on "iteiiguu iu Secular Affairs."
JBPV, l>r. Bliiikie, from tbe commil
tee on statistics, reported I hat be
had a tabula** I sfa ement, which
covered ststt-"f« ol 31 eliutches, nl
which 13 aie on Un- continent ot
Kuiope. 0 in the United Kingdom,
Ii .1 the United States and li in the
Biitish colonies. Prof. Roawell
I). Hitchcock, I). D., read .1 paper
on ""The Ceremonial, the Moral ol
and 1 lie Emotional in Christian Life
and Worship.'' Principal K iberl
Ki.iney, ol Edinburgh, read*paper
on "Modern Theological Th lughta,"
aad l'iI.I-IJI 1 (1...... -»t K igston,
i 1 ida, oue on "R 'liglou In Seen
lai Life."
The Faah.ouablo Beauty in
Turkoy-
[From lbe Tei Bai 1
Firal as to Turkish be.nines,
about whom so much has been writ
.en and so li'ii.-1.-ali> known. Are
... \ indeed the bouris we have
in. 11 taught in considei them ; Are
they the timid, geutle, gazellelike
partners nl their jealous lords I
Alas! poets and dramatists have
very much misled us: their ehiel
beauty is iu the mystery thai sur-rounds
them; aud tbe closer we see
them, both physically and morally,
lbe leas do wi admire. In general
they have oval laces, clear olive
-kins, languishing dark eyes ami
beantilnl bands, soft a-- velvet and
white as snon—beyond 'ins, uotfa
ing. They lack tbe natural grace
and pretty coqdetry ol our Levan-tine
belles and the firm tread, ele-gant
manners and becoming modes
iy ol Ivnopean women. The figures
are clumsy, theii leal urea - imewhal
haish, then lips Inli -iti-l otlen thick;
they walk with a roll (their legs
being bowed), and even th ii natur
al attractions depend it.":.- ui less
upon artificial aid. Tney thickly
powdei their laces, blacken their
brows aud dye theii eyelids and
lashes. ?-> that when bail veiled by
ihe yashmak sun en Ihej are 011
lainly striking and present 1 daz
zllng effe-rt; but under othei cir
i:um*'anees mnm ol 'hem would
pass unobserved.
The Greenback Candi
V.'e -1 • by the iu lbe
/,.„, ,/i 1 hat Col. M (ion lias de
cidi il to 1:.'. 1 ' he race lor I
in tbi.. di-tit'' .1- thf '■ it.-lidate ot
the lit.Ti.fi.il-'-- 1' -■' nn limn
the coi re ipondi ni -■ pnl ihi I I
:i-- Iiesitati d • 1 anm h
||el| to '
oiiilee ol tiir.-i t. - -
Why don 1 ■ in Col
onel join tin n
wl,ippt ig the II nl ' iu nl the
. -.;:.:. Judg.11 tie o|
his papi ■. the ft •■ on,
cal at hee.r t and 1
ing to :■ I lise 1 h li ling
behind lie 'back
|, ,1 li 1! 11 hi II ■'■ is anj
lui .1 p itting . 11 '• ni-didate
' ■ lie ..---■■ lied about
ami bu i< ■' '
..... ..„.,..-1 ■■ . • S
let liim.ei
thl..: ■ ' ' ' 1 ' IVP
bm dretl von r^in 1 ■ • 1
—Iiurham 7'..'-"-